Posts Tagged ‘Chris Cox’
Posted by Larry Doyle on April 3rd, 2014 10:38 AM |
In what might read as a prologue for my book, none other than the Wall Street Journal writes today that the real villains in the ongoing high frequency trading debate are our financial regulators.
Truer words were never spoken.
While America is fed a steady diet of technical terms on latency, co-location, and the like, let’s redirect the focus to where it really belongs, that is a financial regulatory system that has served to promote and protect Wall Street rather than upholding its mandate to protect investors. The evidence is overwhelming and there is very real corruption that has transpired in the process.
As the WSJ concludes:
. . . if New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman and others looking for headlines want to string up high-speed traders, honesty requires them to put the regulators at the front of the rope line.
Now that’s what I’m talking about.
Let’s start with an independent investigation with the power to subpoena. Then get Chris Cox and Mary Schapiro in here.
Larry Doyle
Please order a hard copy or Kindle version of my book, In Bed with Wall Street: The Conspiracy Crippling Our Global Economy.
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Tags: Chris Cox, financial regulators are real hft villains, financial regulatory system, hft WSJ editorial, High-Speed Politics, in bed with Wall Street, Mary Schapiro, The Wall Street Journal, The Wall Street Journal High-Speed Politics
Posted in General, high frequency trading | 4 Comments »
Posted by Larry Doyle on June 29th, 2010 1:15 PM |
Thanks very much to a regular reader of Sense on Cents for sharing a fascinating story. The Government Accountability Project just released the following story regarding a significant settlement paid by the SEC to a former SEC attorney Gary Aguirre. This story highlights the Wall Street-Washington incest to the ‘nth’ degree. Will the media pick this story up and highlight it? They should.
With the details provided in this story, Gary Aguirre clearly shows himself to be a great American and as such earns immediate induction into the Sense on Cents Hall of Fame. The General Accountability Project reports SEC Settles with Aguirre:
In what may be the largest settlement of its kind, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has agreed to pay $755,000 to settle the wrongful termination claim of Gary J. Aguirre, the attorney who headed the SEC’s insider trading investigation of Pequot Capital Management until his firing in September 2005. (more…)
Tags: Arthur Samberg Pequot Capital, Chris Cox, GAP Legal Director Tom Devine, Gary Aguirre, Gary Aguirre termination, Gary Aguirre's firing, Government Accountability Project, insider trading, John Mack subpoena, Merit Systems Protection Board, MSPB, Pequot Capital Management, Pequot insider trading charge, SEC Associate Director Paul Berger, SEC OIG David Kotz, SEC Settles with Aguirre, Securities and Exchange Commission, Wall Street-Washington incest, who is David Zilkha, why do financial regulators turn a blind eye, why was Gary Aguirre fired
Posted in General, SEC | 7 Comments »
Posted by Larry Doyle on January 11th, 2010 9:28 AM |
Will America ever truly learn what happened on Wall Street that brought our markets, our economy, and our country to its knees?
We should not expect the incestuous Wall Street-Washington partners to implicate themselves and thoroughly expose their shortcomings. A full 16 months since the failure of Lehman Bros. and how much have we truly learned? What change has really occurred? Who has been fired in Washington? Who has been indicted on Wall Street? Will the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission, charged with investigating the factors which facilitated our economic disaster, truly be effective?
The truth may hurt but if the hard questions are not asked, the failings are not exposed, and those responsible are not held to account, then the lessons will not be learned, and the experience will likely repeat itself.
Will the commission pretend to investigate, but ultimately wilt under the pressure of the incestuous pillars of power? Will the commission rise above the fray, hold people and institutions to account, and make our country proud? Will the commission use its power to subpoena, if need be?
Whom should the commission pursue? What agencies and institutions should the commission target? If I were on the commission, I would recommend pursuing the following targets: (more…)
Tags: Angelo Mozilo, armando falcon, Chris Cox, financial criis inquiry commission and mary schapiro, Financial crisis inquiry commission, financial crisis inquiry commission and finra, financial crisis inquiry commission and freddie and fannie, financial crisis inquiry commission and goldman sachs, financial crisis inquiry commission and originators, financial crisis inquiry commission and sec, financial crisis inquiry commission vs pecora commission, Franklin Raines, investigation of financial crisis inquiry commission, Leland Brendsel, Lloyd Blankfein, Mary Schapiro, mission of financial crisis inquiry commission, what will financial crisis inquiry commission investigate, who should financial crisis inquiry commission investigate ill, will financial crisis inquiry commission be effective, william donaldson
Posted in derivatives, Fannie Mae, FINRA, Franklin Raines, fraud, Freddie Mac, General, Goldman Sachs, Mary Schapiro, SEC | 17 Comments »
Posted by Larry Doyle on January 4th, 2010 9:47 AM |
For those who missed last evening’s No Quarter Radio’s Sense on Cents with Larry Doyle Hall of Fame and Shame Induction, I am compelled to provide a recap and listing of all those honored or dishonored — depending on one’s perspective. What was the measuring stick to make these assessments? Very simply, the pursuit and promotion of truth, transparency and integrity as we navigate the economic landscape.
Some names you will immediately recognize, others you may not. Additional information about these individuals can be found via the search window (located above the right sidebar) at Sense on Cents. The names appear in no specific order of priority or importance. With no further adieu . . .
Sense on Cents 2009 Hall of Shame Inductees
1. Bernie Madoff
2. Nicholas Cosmo: ran financial scam at Agape World
3. Tim Geithner: tax cheat amongst other things
4. Larry Summers: arrogant, condescending, and sleep deprived
5. Auction-Rate Securities dealers and managers, especially Oppenheimer Holdings, E-Trade, Schwab, Pimco, Van-Kampen, Blackrock
6. The Wall Street Journal
7. George Soros
8. Chris Dodd (D-CT): reasons too numerous to mention
9. The Board of FINRA
10. Franklin Raines and Leland Brendsel: former CEOs of Fannie and Freddie
11. Wall Street management, especially Lloyd Blankfein of Goldman Sachs
12. Frank Dipascali: a special place in hell for Madoff’s CFO
13. Rahm Emanuel
14. Jimmy Cayne: CEO of Bear Stearns
15. Dick Fuld: CEO of Lehman Bros.
16. Congress collectively
17. Barney Frank (D-MA): reasons too numerous to mention, but start with “I want to roll the dice…”
18. Bank Stress Tests: a total sham
19. Allen Stanford
20. Steven Rattner: car czar
21. Bruce Malkenhorst: receiving a 500k pension from Vernon, CA
22. Barack Obama: just another politician (more…)
Tags: Acorn, Allen Stanford, Andrew Madoff, Angelo Haligiannis Ponzi scheme, Arianna Huffington, auction rate securites dealers, Bank Stress Tests, Barack Obama, Barney Frank, Ben Nelson, Bernie Madoff, Board of FINRA, Bob Rodriguez of FPA, Bruce Malkenhorst, Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, Carmen Reinhart, cash for clunkers, Charles Bowsher, Charlie Doyle, Chris Cox, Chris Dodd, Chuck Schumer, Clifford S. Asness, Cohmad Securities, Colonel Elton Johnson Jr., Congress, Daniel Hannan, Dennis Kucinich, Dick Fuld, Edward Liddy, Elizabeth Warren, Erin Arvedlund, financial media, financial regulatory reform, Frank DiPascali, Franklin Raines and Leland Brendsel, George Soros, Goldman Sachs, Harvey Pitt, Helen Davis Chaitman, Helmut Kiener, Howard Kastel, incest between Wall Street and Washington, Jeff Gundlach, Jeffrey Picower, Jimmy Cayne, Joe Saluzzi, Joe the Plumber, John Edwards Mark Sanford Rod Blagoevich, John Mauldin, john wooden, Jonathan Cuneo, Jonathan Weil of Bloomberg, Judge Jed Rakoff, Judge Lawrence McKenna, Kenneth Rogoff, Larry Johnson, Larry Summers, Laurie Goodman of Amherst Securities, Lew Rockwell, Lloyd Blankfein CEO of Goldman Sachs, Madoff family, Mark Madoff, Marta Mossburg, Martin Feldstein, Mary Landrieu, Mary Schapiro, media in America, Mike Duggan of Domus, Nicholas Cosmo of Agape World, Oppenheimer Holdings E-Trade Schwab Pimco Van-Kampen Blackrock, Paul Keating, Paul Volcker, Pete Peterson Genevievette Walker-Lightfoot, Peter King, Peter Madoff, Peter Weinberg, Phil Trupp, PPIP, Raj Rajaratnam of Galleon Group, Rham Emanuel, Richard Greenfield, Richard Ketchum, Robert Benmosche, Robert Jaffe, Robert reich, Robert Rubin, Ronnie Sue Ambrosino, Ruth Madoff, Sean D'Arcy, SEC, Sense on Cents 2009 Hall of Fame Hall of, Sense on Cents 2009 Hall of Shame, Shana Madoff, Shelia Bair, Sin-Ming Shaw, SIPC, Sonny and Marcia Cohn, Steven Rattner, Susan Antilla of Bloomberg, Taylor Bean Whitaker, Tea parties, Thaddeus McCotter, The Wall Street Journal, Themis Trading, Thomas Hoenig, Tiger Woods, Tim Geithner tax cheat, Tom Lauria, truth transparency and integrity, Wall street management, Walter Noel, William K. Black
Posted in General, Sense on Cents | 31 Comments »
Posted by Larry Doyle on June 2nd, 2009 3:02 PM |
Chris Cox’s tenure as chair of the SEC was not highly regarded. From the debacle with the Bernie Madoff situation, to the failure of Lehman Bros., to the fraud encompassing Auction Rate Securities, the SEC under Cox was reduced to a kangaroo court. Knowing full well that he and his regime at the SEC would largely be held in contempt, it appears that Cox attempted to salvage some degree of respect as he prepared to depart. How so? Bloomberg reports Cox Questioned Fannie, Freddie Oversight While At SEC:
Christopher Cox, in one of his last acts as Securities and Exchange Commission chairman, took Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s regulator to task in a letter questioning whether the agency was upholding its legal duty to “preserve and conserve” the mortgage companies’ assets.
Cox asked in the Jan. 16 letter to Federal Housing Finance Agency Director James Lockhart whether the government-sponsored enterprises were being pressed too hard to bolster U.S. housing markets at the expense of profits. As a member of an oversight board advising Lockhart, Cox urged Lockhart to develop an “exit strategy” from government conservatorship that would restore the companies’ finances.
Cox’s questioning of the motivation and practices of the FHFA eerily reminds us of the pressures applied to Freddie Mac CFO David Kellerman prior to his taking his life. Clearly, Cox and Kellerman were uncomfortable in the approach and practices promoted by Uncle Sam. As The New York Times reported on April 22, 2009, Reported Suicide is Latest Shock at Freddie Mac:
Mr. Kellermann was also working in a poisonous political atmosphere. In addition to taking criticism over the bonuses, he was recently involved in tense conversations with the company’s federal regulator over its routine financial disclosures, according to people close to those discussions who also spoke on condition of anonymity. Freddie Mac executives wanted to emphasize to investors that they believed the company was being run to benefit the government, rather than shareholders. The company’s regulator, the Federal Housing Finance Authority, had pushed to play down that language. Freddie Mac reported to the Securities and Exchange Commission that changes it had made in practices to help the government “have increased our expenses or caused us to forgo revenue opportunities.”
In a very similar fashion, Bloomberg today reports:
The letter from Cox, which hasn’t been made public, underscores the tension between Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s responsibilities to investors and government demands that they help end the worst housing crisis since the Great Depression. The issues facing the companies, saddled with seven consecutive quarters of losses totaling $150 billion, will be examined by a House panel tomorrow.
Certainly both Cox and Kellerman felt seriously troubled and conflicted between their roles and responsibilities and the goals of the government programs. The government programs have amounted to a massive redistribution of wealth to select American homeowners from investors, with the ultimate burden being assumed by American taxpayers.
Cox is trying to defend what is left of his reputation by shedding light on the magnitude of the “red sea” of embedded losses at Freddie and Fannie. Over and above that, the systemic risk posed by Freddie and Fannie has very real risk for other quasi-government agencies. Bloomberg addresses all of the possible consequences:
Failure to make Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac financially sound would impose expanded burdens on the Treasury and private debt markets because their $1.7 trillion in unsecured debt and $4 trillion in mortgage bonds are so widely held, he said. The government would bear responsibility even though the companies’ liabilities aren’t technically backed by its full faith and credit, he wrote.
The U.S. may be forced to assume the companies’ liabilities, increasing the $11.3 trillion in outstanding U.S. debt by about 50 percent and hampering the Treasury’s ability to borrow, Cox said.
If the government chose not to back Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s debt and they defaulted, Cox said there may be “significant impact on both the Treasury market as well as the agency market, including the Federal Home Loan Banks, the Farm Credit System and the Tennessee Valley Authority.
While Chris Cox has now been relegated to a punching bag in the pursuit of regulatory reform, he should be commended for drawing attention to the ugly underside of our financial system embodied by Freddie, Fannie, and their cousins FHLB, FCS, and TVA.
LD
Tags: Auction Rate Securities, Bernie Madoff compared to Auction Rate Securities scandal, Chris Cox, Chris Cox questions FHFA, Chris Cox reputation, Chris Cox's tenure at SEC, David Kellerman, David Kellerman's suicide, Farm Credit System, Federal Home Loan Bank system, Federal Housing Finance Agency, FHLBs, Freddie Mac CFO, has FHFA protected Freddie and Fannie investorsi, James Lockhart of FHFA, oversight of Freddie and Fannie, redistribution of wealth, regulator for Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, SEC under Chris Cox, Tennessee Valley Authority
Posted in Chris Cox, Fannie Mae, Federal Home Loan Banks, Freddie Mac, General | 1 Comment »
Posted by Larry Doyle on March 9th, 2009 3:35 PM |
A great American and loyal reader (thanks FL) shared a report recently produced by not-for-profits Essential Information and The Consumer Education Foundation. This report, Sold Out: How Wall Street and Washington Betrayed America, has gotten little to no attention in the general media. What a shame. I find of particular interest the fact that a number of the currently discussed regulatory changes are directly addressing the points highlighted in this report. I personally view these proposed regulatory changes as substantiating this report and adding credibility to its effort. For the naysayers in the audience, I would ask you to review the report and reconsider your assessment.
I was struck a month ago by the incriminating statements put forth by Senator Chuck Hagel and CIA head Leon Panetta, which I highlighted on February 16th in Legalized Bribery. Those statements bluntly indict our massive system of lobbying, political fundraising, and the quality of those running for elected office! In light of that article, I am more and more convinced that our elected officials have turned their offices into massive for profit machines at the expense of our public well being.
I commend the authors of this report, Roger Weissman and James Donahue, for taking the time and making the extensive effort to expose the truth. The full report, 231 pages in length, spares no detail. In studying it, I found the information and analysis riveting. Let me try to summarize it for you. (more…)
Tags: Arthur Levitt, California electricity crisis, CFTC, Chris Cox, Chuck Hagel, Citibank, derivatives, Enron, Essential Information, Fannie Mae, FDR, Freddie Mac, Glass-Steagall, greed, James Donahue, Leon Panetta, media complex, Merrill LYnch, off-balance sheet accounting, Paul Volker, Phil Gramm, President Clinton, regulation, Roger Weissman, The Consumer Educational Foundation, Travelers, Wall Street, Washington
Posted in American Consumers, Bank Failure, Banking Institutions, Barack Obama, Business, Christopher Dodd, Chuck Hagel, Chuck Schumer, Congress, Credit Derivative Swaps, Current Affairs, Democratic Party, Economy, Education, Equity Markets, Fannie Mae, FINRA, Freddie Mac, General, Housing Crisis, Insurance Industry, Leon Panetta, Lobbyists, Obama Administration, Rahm Emanuel, Republicans, Reputation, Wall Street | 14 Comments »